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Common stinkhorn

Phallus impudicus

Description:

Second time in my life I find one of these. This time in my own backyard: the Meerdaelbos. First sight was in some woods in Holland in late summer, but that time I did not make pictures because it was covered on flies. Indeed this is the fungus purpose, for it makes a foul smell to attract insects. The dispersal of spores is different from most "typical" mushrooms that spread their spores through the air. Stinkhorns instead produce a sticky spore mass on their tip which has a sharp, sickly-sweet odor of carrion to attract flies and other insects. Despite its foul smell, it is not poisonous and the young mushroom is consumed in parts of France and Germany.

Habitat:

it occurs in habitats rich in wood debris such as forests and mulched gardens. It appears from summer to late autumn

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The MnMs
Spotted by
The MnMs

Oud-Heverlee, Vlaams Gewest, Belgium

Spotted on Oct 12, 2013
Submitted on Nov 30, 2013

Related Spottings

Phallus luteus Phallus rubicundus Common Stinkhorn Common stinkhorn

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Reference

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